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Rhacel Parreñas Public Lecture

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February 16, 2017
3:30PM - 5:00PM
311 Denney Hall

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Add to Calendar 2017-02-16 15:30:00 2017-02-16 17:00:00 Rhacel Parreñas Public Lecture Public Lecture, "Mobilizing Morality: Migrant Domestic Workers in Dubai"Rhacel Salazar Parreñasis is a  Professor of Sociology and Gender Studies at the University of Southern California. Her areas of research include labor, migration, transnational feminism, economic sociology, gender and the family. Her earlier works examined the constitution of gender in women's migration and transnational household formations. Her more recent works focus on the intersections of human trafficking and labor migration and examine the experiences of "unfree" migrant workers, including migrant domestic workers in Dubai and Singapore and migrant sex workers in Tokyo. She analyzes how morals mediate the experience of unfree labor vis-a-vis the state, migrant community, and workplace, for example by examining how moral views on prostitution are negotiated by sex workers in the process of their labor migration or how the moral views of employers result in varying experiences for domestic workers who are outside the boundaries of legal protection. 311 Denney Hall Department of Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies wgss@osu.edu America/New_York public

Public Lecture, "Mobilizing Morality: Migrant Domestic Workers in Dubai"

Rhacel Salazar Parreñasis is a  Professor of Sociology and Gender Studies at the University of Southern California. Her areas of research include labor, migration, transnational feminism, economic sociology, gender and the family. Her earlier works examined the constitution of gender in women's migration and transnational household formations. Her more recent works focus on the intersections of human trafficking and labor migration and examine the experiences of "unfree" migrant workers, including migrant domestic workers in Dubai and Singapore and migrant sex workers in Tokyo. She analyzes how morals mediate the experience of unfree labor vis-a-vis the state, migrant community, and workplace, for example by examining how moral views on prostitution are negotiated by sex workers in the process of their labor migration or how the moral views of employers result in varying experiences for domestic workers who are outside the boundaries of legal protection.